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Logging and Recovery

Logging and Recovery. CC Lecture 2. Review: The ACID properties. A tomicity: all actions in the Xact happen, or none happen C onsistency: if each Xact is consistent, and the DB starts consistent, it ends up consistent I solation: execution of one Xact is isolated from that of other Xacts

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Logging and Recovery

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  1. Logging and Recovery CC Lecture 2

  2. Review: The ACID properties • Atomicity: all actions in the Xact happen, or none happen • Consistency: if each Xact is consistent, and the DB starts consistent, it ends up consistent • Isolation: execution of one Xact is isolated from that of other Xacts • Durability: if a Xact commits, its effects persist • The Recovery Manager guarantees Atomicity & Durability

  3. T1 T2 T3 T4 T5 Motivation • Atomicity: • Transactions may abort (“Rollback”) • Durability: • What if DBMS stops running (causes?) • Desired behavior after system restarts: • T1, T2 & T3 should be durable • T4 & T5 should be aborted (effects not seen). crash!

  4. Assumptions • Concurrency control is in effect • Strict 2PL, in particular • Updates are happening “in place” • i.e. data is overwritten on (deleted from) the disk. • A simple scheme to guarantee Atomicity & Durability?

  5. Handling the Buffer Pool • Force writes to disk? • poor response time • but provides durability • Steal buffer-pool frames from uncommited Xacts? • if not, poor throughput • if so, how to provide atomicity? No Steal Steal Force Trivial Desired No Force

  6. Examples • STEAL (why Atomicity is a problem) • steal frame F: some page P is written to disk • what if the Xact with the lock on P aborts? • must remember the old value of P at steal time! • to support UNDOing the write to P • NO FORCE (why Durability is a problem) • how to guarantee durability without writing? • Can’t be done! • So write as little as possible, in a convenient place, at commit time • to support REDOing actions

  7. Basic Idea: Logging • Store REDO and UNDO information in a log • for every update, generate UNDO & REDO info • sequential writes to log (put it on a separate disk) • minimal info (diff) written to log, so multiple updates fit in a single log page • Log: An ordered list of REDO/UNDO actions • log record contains • <XID, pageID, offset, len, old data, new data> • and additional control info (which we’ll see soon)

  8. Write-Ahead Logging (WAL) • The Write-Ahead Logging Protocol: • must force the log record for an update before the corresponding data page gets to disk • must write all log records for a Xact before commit. • #1 guarantees Atomicity • #2 guarantees Durability • Exactly how is logging (and recovery!) done? • We’ll study the ARIES algorithms

  9. DB RAM WAL & the Log LSNs pageLSNs flushedLSN • Each log record has a unique Log Sequence Number (LSN) • LSN’s always increasing • Each data page contains a pageLSN • the LSN of the most recent log record for an update to that page. • System keeps track of flushedLSN • the max LSN flushed so far • log records in memory form the “tail” of the log • WAL sez: before a page is written, • pageLSN £ flushedLSN

  10. LogRecord prevLSN XID type pageID length update records only offset before-image after-image Log Records Possible log record types: • Update • Commit • Abort • End (signifies end of commit or abort) • Compensation Log Records (CLRs) • for UNDO actions

  11. Other Log-Related State • Transaction Table • one entry per active Xact • contains XID, status (running/commited/aborted), and lastLSN • Dirty Page Table • one entry per dirty page in buffer pool • contains recLSN -- the LSN of the log record which first caused the page to be dirty

  12. DB RAM LogRecords prevLSN XID type pageID length update records only offset before-image after-image The Big Picture pageLSNs Xact Table lastLSN status Dirty Page Table recLSN flushedLSN

  13. Normal Execution of an Xact • Strict 2PL • Series of reads & writes, followed by commit or abort • assume that write is atomic on disk • STEAL, NO-FORCE buffer management, with Write-Ahead Logging

  14. Simple Transaction Abort • For now, consider an explicit abort of a Xact • no crash involved • We want to “play back” the log in reverse order, UNDOing updates • get lastLSN of Xact from Xact table • can follow chain of log records backward via the prevLSN field • Before starting UNDO, write an Abort log record • for recovering from crash during UNDO!

  15. Abort, cont. • To perform UNDO, must have a lock on data! • No problem! • Before restoring old value of a page, write a CLR to the log • you continue logging while you UNDO!! • CLR has one extra field: undonextLSN • points to the next LSN to undo (i.e. the prevLSN of the record we’re currently undoing) • At end of UNDO, write an “end” log record

  16. Transaction Commit • Write commit record to log. • All log records up to lastLSN are flushed • guarantees that flushedLSN ³ lastLSN • note that log flushes are sequential, synchronous writes • many log records per log page • Commit() returns • write end record to log

  17. Checkpoints • Periodically, want to get a “snapshot” of the DBMS -- speeds up recovery! • new log records: begin_checkpoint, end_checkpoint. • write a begin_checkpoint record as a new Xact • end_checkpoint record contains the current state of the Xact and Dirty Page tables • after end_checkpoint is flushed, the LSN of the begin_checkpoint record is stored in a special master record • Note: this is a “fuzzy checkpoint”! • no locking involved. good as of begin_checkpt.

  18. Recovering from a Crash Oldest log rec. of Xact active at crash • Start from a checkpoint (found via master record) • Three phases. Need to: • figure out which Xacts committed since checkpoint, which failed (Analysis) • REDO all actions (repeat history) • UNDO effects of failed Xacts Smallest recLSN in dirty page table after Analysis Last chkpt CRASH A R U

  19. Recovery: The Analysis Phase • reconstruct state at checkpoint • via end_checkpoint record • scan log forward from chkpt. • End record: remove Xact from Xact table • Other records: add Xact to Xact table, set lastLSN=LSN, change Xact status on commit • Update record: if P not in D.P.T. • add P to dirty page table, set recLSN=LSN

  20. Recovery: The REDO Phase • Repeat History to reconstruct state at crash: • reapply all updates (even of aborted Xacts!) • redo any actions in CLRs • Start with smallest recLSN in D.P.T. Redo each action unless: • affected page is not in the Dirty Page Table • affected page is in DPT, but has recLSN > LSN • pageLSN (in DB) ³ LSN • To REDO an action: • reapply logged action • set pageLSN to LSN. No additional logging!

  21. Recovery: The UNDO Phase • ToUndo={ l | l a lastLSN of a “loser” Xact} • Repeat: • choose largest LSN among ToUndo • if this LSN is a CLR and undonextLSN==NULL • write an End record for this Xact • if this LSN is a CLR, and undonextLSN != NULL • Add undonextLSN to ToUndo • (Q: what happens to other CLRs?) • else this LSN is an update. Undo the update, write a CLR, add prevLSN to ToUndo. Until ToUndo is empty.

  22. RAM Example of Recovery LSN LOG 00 05 10 20 30 40 45 50 60 begin_checkpoint end_checkpoint update: T1 writes P5 update T2 writes P3 T1 abort CLR: Undo T1 LSN 10 T1 End update: T3 writes P1 update: T2 writes P5 CRASH, RESTART prevLSNs Xact Table lastLSN status Dirty Page Table recLSN flushedLSN ToUndo

  23. RAM Example: Crash During Restart! LSN LOG 00,05 10 20 30 40,45 50 60 70 80,85 90 begin_checkpoint, end_checkpoint update: T1 writes P5 update T2 writes P3 T1 abort CLR: Undo T1 LSN 10, T1 End update: T3 writes P1 update: T2 writes P5 CRASH, RESTART CLR: Undo T2 LSN 60 CLR: Undo T3 LSN 50, T3 end CRASH, RESTART CLR: Undo T2 LSN 20, T2 end undonextLSN Xact Table lastLSN status Dirty Page Table recLSN flushedLSN ToUndo

  24. Additional Crash Issues • What happens if system crashed during Analysis? During REDO? • How do you limit the amount of work in REDO? • flush asynchronously in the background • watch “hot spots”! • How do you limit the amount of work in UNDO? • avoid long-running Xacts

  25. Summary of Logging/Recovery • RecoveryManager guarantees Atomicity & Durability • Use WAL to allow STEAL/NO-FORCE w/o sacrificing correctness • LSNs identify log records; linked into backwards chains per transaction (via prevLSN) • pageLSN allows comparison of data page and log records

  26. Summary, Cont. • Checkpointing: a quick way to limit the amount of log to scan on recovery • Recovery works in 3 phases • Analysis since checkpoint • Redo since oldest recLSN • Undo from end to first LSN of oldest Xact alive at crash • Upon Undo, write CLRs • Redo “repeats history”: simplifies the logic!

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